Meshack Asare is a popular African children's author. He was born in Ghana and currently resides in Degenfeld, Germany. On 15 July 2014, he was announced as a finalist for the prestigious international award, the 2015 NSK Neustadt Prize for Children's Literature, which he won on 24 October 2014, becoming the first African to receive the award. The Brassman's Secret was his representative text read by the nominating jury, and the award honors his entire body of work.
Life
Meshack Asare was born September 18, 1945 in Nyankumasi, Ghana. His mother Agatha Adoma Afram was a trader and his father Joseph K. Asare was an accountant. Asare was the second of six children. Asare studied Fine Arts at the College of Art in Kumasi, and between 1967 and 1979 he was a teacher in Ghana. During this time he began to write and illustrate children's books, including the much translated Tawia Goes to Sea, which received the Ghana National Book Award and the UNESCO citation "Best picture book from Africa". After a period of ten years wherein which he could not publish any work, Asare returned in 1981 with a new book, The Brassman's Secret, which was translated into many languages, and won the Noma Award in 1982 as the best book published in Africa in the preceding year. Many further successes followed. In 1984, Asare's Cat in Search of a Friend won the Austrian National Prize and a BIB Golden Plaque at the Bratislava Biennale. Asare studied for a M.A. in Social Anthropology at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies, and since 1993 he was based in London, while frequently travelling through Africa, looking to experience as many African cultures as possible so that he can represent them in his works. His book Sosu's Call was the winner of the 1999 UNESCO First Prize for Children's and Young People's Literature in the Service of Tolerance.
Selected bibliography
Children's literature
Noma's Sand: A Tale from Lesotho
Meliga's Day
Nana's Son
Sosu's Call
The Magic Goat
Halima
Cat in Search of a Friend
Chipo and the Bird on the Hill: A tale of ancient Zimbabwe